Pubdate: Wed, 22 Feb 2006 Source: Daily Press (Newport News,VA) Copyright: 2006 The Daily Press Contact: http://www.dailypress.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/585 Author: Bentley Boyd Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) W-JCC SCHOOL DRUG-TESTING PLAN DRAWS QUESTIONS Parents And Officials Debate The Right To Privacy Versus The Privileges Of Driving Cars And Playing Sports WILLIAMSBURG -- After several parents told the School Board that a random drug policy would invade the privacy of their children, high school officials told the board the students are already being assaulted by widespread drug and alcohol use. "Kids stay home because they don't want to face it," said Jamestown Athletic Director Tom Dolan. "We have students who basically shut themselves in their homes on weekends to avoid this. That's how prevalent it is." Almost 50 people, about a dozen of them students, attended a public hearing on a drug-testing policy proposed for Williamsburg-James City County Schools. Superintendent Gary Mathews has asked that high schools randomly drug test all students in extracurricular activities or using a permit to park their cars on campus. That plan would reach about 1,000 students at each W-JCC high school - about two-thirds of the student body. David Lee, a lawyer and coach of Jamestown's mock trial team, said that testing pool would be too broad to meet restrictions the U.S. Supreme Court has set on testing high school students for drugs. Parent Curt Gaul agreed: "Drug testing is a shotgun approach to address the minority of students who are taking drugs." Jamestown Principal Chuck Wagner told the School Board that 17 students at his school have been cited for possession or use of drugs or alcohol this school year - four within the past two weeks. "The problem is much larger than we at the schools know or that parents are willing to acknowledge," Wagner said. "Whether or not that's true, I don't know, but that's what we're being told: that students can't get away from it." He and Lafayette High School Principal David Tremaine agreed there are many more cases that don't reach a formal finding or expulsion but involve parents expressing concerns. Wagner said, "The parents' response has been not, 'Oh, I knew about this, and it was only a matter of time,' but it was, 'Oh, I had no idea.' " Jamestown High School senior Christine Bottles spent the past year on a committee studying the drug policy. She told the School Board she is in favor of testing: "This will be done as a deterrent, not as a punishment. It will give (students) a reason to say no." But student Zoe Welch said other students are worried that taking allergy medications or eating poppy-seed bagels could give students a false positive on a drug test. "I believe drug testing is humiliating, costly and ineffective," she said. Most of the speakers at the public hearing were against the proposal. Kathy Hornsby has two sons in eighth grade at Berkeley Middle School and said, "I don't think the schools have any business demanding urine specimens of students who are not suspected of drug usage." Dane Jablonsky has two daughters at Lafayette High School, and he asked the School Board, "Will we teach them about hypocrisy? Nicotine will kill more of the class of 2006 - the class of my daughter - than marijuana." He suggested the district allow parents to opt out of any student drug-testing program and suggested the creation of an endowment that would pay for a student's first year of college if the student stays clean for three years in high school. Carolee Bush spent 34 years as a high school teacher. She told the board, "When we break the Fourth Amendment, which protects against search and seizure without probable cause, how can we expect our students to understand the Bill of Rights?" Lafayette Athletic Director Dan Barner said he would have agreed with the policy opponents three years ago, but he has seen a recent and rapid change in the attitude of many students toward drug use. He noted that just last week, he learned his own grandchild was taking a drink that promised quick energy for sports. "The big change is that many of them think it's OK. They say they think it's the same thing as Mom and Dad going down to the corner to Starbucks," Barner told the School Board. School Board member Ron Vaught said the random policy is not too broad, and he picked up on the testing opponents' use of the right to privacy argument. "Parking on the student lot, driving a car to school - as I've told my daughter - is a privilege, not a right. Therefore, with those privileges come responsibilities," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman